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Friday, February 28, 2014

Forgotten Books: Escape to Sindom - Don Elliott (Robert Silverberg)

Like many of the novels in the various imprints published by
William Hamling's black box empire, ESCAPE TO SINDOM is essentially a crime
story. Val Sparkman is a professional criminal—a con man, a forger, a thief, a
killer when he has to be. A bit of bad luck lands him in a small-town jail in
Iowa. The local lawmen don't really have a clue who they've locked up, and
Sparkman knows he has to escape before they find out. He manages to do so, but
now he's on the run with no money and no gun. He hitches a ride and knocks out
the traveling salesman who picks him up, stealing the man's car and heading for
Mexico, but his odds of getting there are slim.

Meanwhile, a few towns away, beautiful but bored young waitress (and town
tramp) Janey Haskell is tired of her life and wants to do something big and
exciting. It's pretty much inevitable that when a handsome stranger comes
along, Janey will latch on to him and run away with him, even though he may be
dangerous...

Anybody who's read very many noir novels, or very many of these soft-core
novels, or both (that would be me and no doubt some of you), will know pretty
much everything that's going to happen in ESCAPE TO SINDOM. That said, a
skillful author can elevate a book above its formula with good writing, and not
surprisingly that's what we have in this one since it was written by Robert
Silverberg under his Don Elliott pseudonym. Silverberg keeps things racing
along at an entertaining pace, throwing in a few flashbacks to earlier sexual
adventures of Sparkman and Janey. There's an occasional touch of humor to break
up the overall sense of impending doom, and the final twist is a pretty good
one.

By the time ESCAPE TO SINDOM was published, the sex scenes in these books were
more frequent and more graphic and the rest of the plot isn't quite as
important as it was in the books published just a few years earlier. That keeps
it from being in the top rank of Silverberg's Don Elliott novels, but it's
still pretty darned entertaining. I'll read any of them I come across, and I
haven't been disappointed yet.

9 comments:

I read PARTY GIRL by Don Elliott back in the fifties. It was my first soft porn read. I was a preteen and very excited by that book. Have often looked for it to see what excited such a young chap but have never found it. The cover is seen on Amazon used for what is called a lost manuscript never published. I wonder how they can use the cover of a long ago printed book for this new offering. Maybe I shouldn't have written this. That would be true only if I were still that preteen.Thanks for this entry. It brought back memories.

Rick,They're pricey (close to 30 bucks including shipping) but there are a couple of copies of the original 1960 Nightstand Books edition of PARTY GIRL listed on ABE right now. For $11 you can get a copy of the 1973 Reed Nightstand reprint. The Reed Nightstand editions were rewritten slightly (by an in-house editor) to make the sex scenes more graphic, and there may be some other minor updating. Other than that they're pretty close to the originals.

Kelly,Check out his novel BLOOD ON THE MINK, reprinted a few years ago by Hard Case Crime. That edition also includes a couple of Silverberg's stories from the crime digests, which is where the novel originally appeared. Wonderful stuff. There isn't much Silverberg hasn't written.